93-year-old London, Ont., runner breaks Canadian record, shows no signs of slowing down

A 93-year-old runner broke his own record Sunday morning, completing five kilometres in 36 minutes and 30 seconds.

Canio Polosa, 93, ran the 5K Halloween Haunting race in Springbank Park. (Rebecca Zandbergen/CBC)

A 93-year-old runner broke his own Canadian record Sunday morning, completing five kilometres in 36 minutes and 30 seconds.

Canio Polosa flew over the finish line at Springbank Park in London, Ont., as part of the Halloween Haunting race. 

His previous Canadian Masters Athletics record for his age group was five kilometres in 37 minutes and 41 seconds.

“Until the next time,” Polosa said to CBC London’s Rebecca Zandbergen after the race. 

Canio Polosa is off! Just starting his 5K run! He’s hoping to break his own Canadian record for the fastest time in the 90+ crowd. Good luck, Canio! #ldnont pic.twitter.com/gNBRf3JZ1u

—@RebeccaZandberg

 

Polosa, who stands five feet six inches tall and weighs 113 pounds, started running at age 60. The retired doctor practiced internal medicine and taught at McGill University at the time. 

At 80, he took a break from running to rest his knees. That break proved to be temporary when he laced up his running shoes once more in his 90s.

Love this first finger wag. pic.twitter.com/lSrWuNPaSM

—@RebeccaZandberg

 

Polosa said he runs with the help of knee braces his wife purchased for him.

He was in good spirits after Sunday’s race, and he even joked about improving his technique for races 10 to twenty years down the line.

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